| Literature DB >> 35836249 |
Abstract
Emerging evidence has demonstrated that radiotherapy (RT) can not only cause direct damage to cancer cells but also lead to immunogenic cell death (ICD), which involves the activation of host antitumor immune response in tumor immune microenvironment (TIME). RT-induced ICD comprises the release of damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) from dying cancer cells that result in the activation of tumor-specific immunity to elicit long-term antitumor efficacy in both original and abscopal tumor sites. Adenosine triphosphate (ATP), as an important DAMP released by irradiated cancer cells and an essential factor within purinergic pathway, can be further hydrolyzed to adenosine (ADO) by two key ectonucleotidases, CD39 and CD73, to further modulate the antitumor immunity in TIME through purinergic signaling via the interaction to its specific receptors such as adenosine 2A receptor (A2AR) and A2BR widely expressed on the surface of the components in TIME, including cancer cells and many immune effector cells. In this review, we first introduced key components in purinergic pathway including ATP, ADO, their receptors, and essential ectonucleotidases. Then we reviewed the regulation of ATP and ADO levels and their main mechanisms by which they promote tumor growth and broadly suppress antitumor immunity through inhibiting the pro-inflammatory response of dendritic cells, cytotoxic T lymphocytes, and natural killer cells, while improving the anti-inflammatory response of regulatory T cells, macrophages, and myeloid-derived suppressor cells in TIME, especially after irradiation. Finally, we presented an overview of dozens of promising therapeutics including pharmacological antagonists and specific antibodies targeting ADO receptors and ectonucleotidases CD39 or CD73 investigated in the clinic for cancer treatment, especially focusing on the preclinical studies and clinical trials being explored for blocking the purinergic signaling to enhance RT as a combination antitumor therapeutic strategy, which has a robust potential to be translated to the clinic in the future.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Immunogenic cell death; Immunotherapy; Purinergic pathway; Radiotherapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35836249 PMCID: PMC9284706 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-022-02430-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Fig. 1ATP release, receptors, and ectonucleotidases involved in purinergic signaling pathway. ATP is released into the extracellular space via exocytosis, transporters (for example, ABC), channels (for example, PANX-1), P2X7R, or cell lysis (for example, caused by irradiation). Once in the extracellular space, ATP acts at P2XR and P2YR, and is also hydrolyzed to ADP and AMP by ENTPDases such as CD39. ADP can activate P2Y12R and is hydrolyzed to AMP, which can be further hydrolyzed to ADO by CD73. CD73-generated ADO can bind to its P1 receptors (A1R, A2AR, A2BR, and A3R). ADO can be subsequently degraded to inosine by ADA, or transported into the intracellular space via NT. ABC, ATP-binding cassette; ADA, adenosine deaminase; ADO, adenosine; ADP, adenosine diphosphate; AMP, adenosine monophosphate; ATP, adenosine triphosphate; NT, nucleoside transporter; PANX-1, pannexin 1
Fig. 2The role of purinergic pathway in RT-induced ICD. A ATP in RT-induced T-cell-mediated ICD. Tumor cells release ATP (via cell lysis, channels such as PANX-1, and P2X7R), chemokines, and tumor antigens following RT to recruit immature DCs to TIME. ATP then binds to its receptors (P2XR/P2YR) on immature DCs leading to their activation. These DCs can take up and process tumor antigens released from dying tumor cells to transform into mature DCs. Mature DCs can then migrate to tumor-draining lymph nodes (TDLN), where DCs secret IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α, and IFN-γ and cross-present tumor antigen peptides by MHC I to stimulate T-cell differentiation to CD8+ CTLs. CTLs can then migrate to the tumor site and maybe remote sites to recognize and kill residue tumor cells by releasing perforin, granzyme B, and/or through the interaction of the Fas/FasL signaling. B Production of ADO leads to a post-RT immunosuppressive TIME. Hypoxia induced by RT upregulates the expression of HIF1-α, leading to the overexpression of CD39 and CD73 of cancer cells to hydrolyze large amounts of ATP to ADO in TIME. ADO is contributed to an immunosuppressive TIME to enable tumor cells to escape immune-surveillance by suppressing the effector immune components including Teff, DCs, NK cells, and neutrophils, while enhancing the activity of immunosuppressive cell subsets including Treg, M2-macrophage, and MDSC, in which pharmacological antagonists against A2AR and/or A2BR as well as blockades inhibiting CD39 and CD73 can reverse ADO-induced immunosuppressive TIME to favor antitumor immunity. A2AR, A2A adenosine receptor; A2BR, A2B adenosine receptor; ADO, adenosine; AMP, adenosine monophosphate; ATP, adenosine triphosphate; CTL, cytotoxic T lymphocyte; CTLA4, cytotoxic T-lymphocyte associated protein 4; DC, dendritic cell; Fas, factor-related apoptosis; FasL, factor-related apoptosis ligand; ICD, immunogenic cell death; IFN-γ, interferon gamma; IL-1β, interleukin-1 beta; IL-2, interleukin-2; IL-6, interleukin-6; IL-10, interleukin-10; IL-12, interleukin-12; MHC I, major histocompatibility complex class I; P2X7R, P2X7 purinergic receptor; PANX-1, pannexin 1; PD1, programmed cell death protein 1; PGE2, prostaglandin E2; RT, radiotherapy; TCR, T-cell receptor; TDLN, tumor-draining lymph node; TGF-β, transforming growth factor beta; TNF-a, tumor necrosis factor alpha; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor. Partly created by Figdraw (www.figdraw.com)
Blockades of purinergic signaling registered in clinicaltrials.gov
| Target | Agent | Pharmaceutical Supplier | Type | Dual-specific | Delivery method | Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier | Phase | Status | Cancer | Single agent | Combination |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ciforadenant (CPI-444) | Corvus | Antagonist | N/A | Orally | NCT02655822 | I | Completed | RCC, mCRPC | YES | Atezolizumab | |
| NCT04280328 | I | Completed | MM | N/A | Daratumumab | ||||||
| NCT03337698 | I/II | Recruiting | NSCLC | N/A | Atezolizumab | ||||||
| CS3005 | CStone Pharmaceuticals | Antagonist | N/A | Orally | NCT04233060 | I | Completed | Advanced solid tumors | YES | N/A | |
Etrumadenant (AB928) | Arcus Biosciences | Antagonist | A2AR/ A2BR | Orally | NCT03629756 | I | Completed | Advanced malignancies | N/A | Zimberelimab | |
| NCT03719326 | I | Completed | TNBC, OC | N/A | PLD, and/or IPI-549, NP | ||||||
| NCT03720678 | I | Completed | mGEC, mCRC | N/A | CT | ||||||
| NCT03846310 | I | Active, not recruiting | non-squamous NSCLC | N/A | CT, and/or anti-PD1 antibody | ||||||
| NCT04892875 | I | Not yet recruiting | Locally advanced head and neck cancers | N/A | RT, CT, and zimberelimab | ||||||
| NCT03193190 | I/II | Active, not recruiting | mPDAC | N/A | Atezolizumab and CT | ||||||
| NCT03555149 | I/II | Recruiting | mCRC | N/A | Atezolizumab and regorafenib | ||||||
| NCT04381832 | I/II | Recruiting | mCRPC | N/A | Zimberelimab, and/or CT; or with AB680 and/or zimberelimab | ||||||
| NCT04660812 | I/II | Recruiting | mCRC | N/A | Zimberelimab and/or CT, bevacizumab, and Regorafenib | ||||||
| NCT03821246 | II | Recruiting | Localized PC prior to radical prostatectomy | N/A | Atezolizumab | ||||||
| NCT04262856 | II | Recruiting | mNSCLC | N/A | Zimberelimab and domvanalimab | ||||||
| NCT04791839 | II | Recruiting | previously ICI-treated NSCLC | N/A | Zimberelimab and domvanalimab | ||||||
| NCT05024097 | II | Recruiting | Rectal cancer | N/A | RT, CT, and zimberelimab | ||||||
| NCT05335941 | II | Not yet recruiting | Previously treated advanced or metastatic MTAP-deficient UC | N/A | Pemetrexed and zimberelimab | ||||||
Imaradenant (AZD4635) | AstraZeneca | Antagonist | N/A | Orally | NCT02740985 | I | Active, not recruiting | Advanced solid malignancies | YES | Durvalumab, or abiraterone acetate enzalutamide, or docetaxel; with durvalumab and oleclumab | |
| NCT03980821 | I | Completed | Advanced solid malignancies | YES | N/A | ||||||
| NCT04089553 | II | Active, not recruiting | PC | N/A | Durvalumab or oleclumab | ||||||
| NCT04495179 | II | Active, not recruiting | mCRPC | N/A | Durvalumab, ± cabazitaxel | ||||||
| INCB106385 | Incyte | Antagonist | A2AR/ A2BR | Orally | NCT04580485 | I | Recruiting | Advanced solid tumors | YES | INCMGA00012 | |
Inupadenant (EOS100850) | iTeos Therapeutics | Antagonist | N/A | Orally | NCT03873883 | I | Recruiting | Adult solid tumors | YES | Pembrolizumab or CT | |
| NCT05117177 | I | Recruiting | Adult solid tumors | YES | N/A | ||||||
| NCT05060432 | I/II | Recruiting | Advanced solid tumors | N/A | EOS-448 | ||||||
| PBF-999 | Palo Biopharma | Antagonist | A2AR/ PDE-10 | Orally | NCT03786484 | I | Recruiting | Advanced solid tumors | YES | N/A | |
Preladenant (MK-3814) | Merck | Antagonist | N/A | Orally | NCT03099161 | I | Terminateda | Advanced solid tumors | YES | Pembrolizumab | |
Taminadenant (NIR178/PBF-509) | Palo Biopharma (Novartis) | Antagonist | N/A | Orally | NCT02403193 | I | Recruiting | Advanced solid tumors | N/A | KAZ954 | |
| NCT03742349 | I | Recruiting | Advanced/relapsed RCC and other malignancies with HIF stablizing mutations | N/A | PDR001 and DFF332 | ||||||
| NCT04237649 | I | Recruiting | Advanced solid tumors | N/A | KAZ954 | ||||||
| NCT04895748 | I | Recruiting | Advanced/relapsed RCC and other malignancies with HIF stablizing mutations | N/A | PDR001 and DFF332 | ||||||
| NCT03207867 | II | Active, not recruiting | Solid tumors and NHL | N/A | PDR001 | ||||||
| PBF-1129 | Palo Biopharma | Antagonist | N/A | Orally | NCT03274479 | I | Recruiting | Locally advanced/metastatic NSCLC | YES | N/A | |
| NCT05234307 | I | Not yet recruiting | Recurrent/metastatic NSCLC | N/A | Nivolumab | ||||||
| TT-4 | Tarus Therapeutics | Antagonist | N/A | Orally | NCT04976660 | I/II | Not yet recruiting | Advanced selected solid tumors | YES | N/A | |
| TT-702 | Teon Therapeutics | Antagonist | N/A | Orally | NCT05272709 | I/II | Recruiting | Advanced solid tumors | YES | N/A | |
| ES002023 | Elpiscience Biopharma | Antibody | N/A | I.V | NCT05075564 | I | Recruiting | Locally advanced or metastatic solid tumors | YES | N/A | |
| IPH5301 | Innate Pharma | Antibody | N/A | I.V | NCT04261075 | I | Active, not recruiting | Advanced solid tumors | YES | Durvalumab, ± oleclumab | |
| NCT05143970 | I | Recruiting | Advanced solid tumors | YES | CT and trastuzumab | ||||||
| PUR001 | Purinomia Biotech | Antibody | N/A | I.V | NCT05234853 | I | Not yet recruiting | Advanced solid tumors | YES | N/A | |
| SRF617 | Surface Oncology | Antibody | N/A | I.V | NCT04336098 | I | Recruiting | Adult solid tumors | YES | CT or pembrolizumab, or both therapies | |
| NCT05177770 | II | Recruiting | mCRPC, PC | N/A | Etrumadenant and zimberelimab | ||||||
| TTX-030 | Trishula Therapeutics (AbbVie) | Antibody | N/A | I.V | NCT03884556 | I | Active, not recruiting | Advanced cancers | YES | CT or pembrolizumab | |
| NCT04306900 | I | Recruiting | Advanced cancers | N/A | CT, or budigalimab, or pmebrolizumab, or budigalimab and CT | ||||||
| AK119 | Akesobio | Antibody | N/A | I.V | NCT04572152 | I | Recruiting | Advanced solid tumors | YES | AK104 | |
| NCT05173792 | I | Recruiting | Advanced solid tumors | YES | N/A | ||||||
| ATG-037 | Antengene | Antagonist | N/A | Orally | NCT05205109 | I | Not yet recruiting | Locally advanced or metastatic solid tumors | YES | Pembrolizumab | |
| BMS-986179 | BMS | Antibody | N/A | I.V | NCT02754141 | I/II | Active, not recruiting | Malignant solid tumor | YES | Nivolumab or rHuPH20 | |
| GS-1423 | Gilead Sciences | Antibody | CD73/ TGFβRII | I.V | NCT03954704 | I | Terminatedb | Advanced solid tumors | YES | CT | |
| HLX23 | Henlius Biotech | Antibody | N/A | I.V | NCT04797468 | I | Not yet recruiting | Advanced solid tumors | YES | N/A | |
| IBI325 | Innovent Biologics | Antibody | N/A | I.V | NCT05119998 | I | Recruiting | Advanced solid tumors | YES | Sintilimab | |
| NCT05246995 | I | Not yet recruiting | Advanced solid tumors | N/A | Sintilimab | ||||||
| INCA00186 | Incyte | Antibody | N/A | I.V | NCT04989387 | I | Recruiting | Advanced solid tumors | N/A | INCB106385, ± retifanlimab | |
| JAB-BX102 | Jacobio | Antibody | N/A | I.V | NCT05174585 | I/II | Not yet recruiting | Advanced solid tumors | YES | Pembrolizumab | |
| LY3475070 | Eli Lilly | Antagonist | N/A | Orally | NCT04148937 | I | Active, not recruiting | Advanced cancers | YES | Pembrolizumab | |
Mupadolimab (CPI-006) | Corvus | Antibody | N/A | I.V | NCT03454451 | I | Recruiting | Advanced cancers | YES | Ciforadenant or pembrolizumab | |
| NZV930(SRF373) | Surface Oncology | Antibody | N/A | I.V | NCT03549000 | I | Recruiting | Advanced malignancies | YES | PDR001 or NIR178, or both agents | |
| NCT04237649 | I | Recruiting | Advanced solid tumors | N/A | KAZ954 | ||||||
Oleclumab (MEDI9447) | Medimmune (AstraZeneca) | Antibody | N/A | I.V | NCT02503774 | I | Active, not recruiting | Select advanced solid tumors | YES | Durvalumab | |
| NCT03736473 | I | Completed | Advanced solid malignancies | YES | N/A | ||||||
| NCT03773666 | I | Active, not recruiting | Muscle-invasive bladder cancer | N/A | Durvalumab | ||||||
| NCT03819465 | I | Not yet recruiting | Previously untreated NSCLC | N/A | Durvalumab, ± CT | ||||||
| NCT03381274 | I/II | Active, not recruiting | NSCLC | N/A | Osimertinib or AZD4635 | ||||||
| NCT03611556 | I/II | Active, not recruiting | metastatic pancreatic cancer | N/A | CT, ± durvalumab | ||||||
| NCT03616886 | I/II | Active, not recruiting | Previously untreated locally recurrent inoperable or metastatic TNBC | N/A | Durvalumab and CT | ||||||
| NCT03742102 | I/II | Recruiting | mTNBC | N/A | Durvalumab and CT | ||||||
| NCT04068610 | I/II | Active, not recruiting | MSS-CRC | N/A | Durvalumab, bevacizumab, and CT | ||||||
| NCT03267589 | II | Completed | Relapsed OC | N/A | Durvalumab, tremililumab, and MEDI0562 | ||||||
| NCT03334617 | II | Recruiting | NSCLC | N/A | Durvalumab | ||||||
| NCT03794544 | II | Completed | Resectable NSCLC | N/A | Durvalumab | ||||||
| NCT03822351 | II | Active, not recruiting | NSCLC | N/A | Durvalumab | ||||||
| NCT03833440 | II | Recruiting | ICI-resistant NSCLC | N/A | Durvalumab | ||||||
| NCT03875573 | II | Recruiting | Luminal B breast cancer | N/A | SBRT and durvalumab | ||||||
| NCT04145193 | II | Withdrawnc | MSS-CRC | N/A | Durvalumab and CT | ||||||
| NCT04262375 | II | Withdrawnd | NSCLC, RCC | N/A | Durvalumab | ||||||
| NCT04262388 | II | Withdrawne | PDSC, NSCLC, HNSC | N/A | Durvalumab | ||||||
| NCT04668300 | II | Recruiting | Recurrent, refractory, or metastatic sarcoma | N/A | Durvalumab | ||||||
| NCT04940286 | II | Recruiting | Resectable/borderline resectable primary pancreatic cancer | N/A | Durvalumab and CT | ||||||
| NCT05061550 | II | Not yet recruiting | Resectable NSCLC | N/A | Durvalumab | ||||||
| NCT05221840 | III | Recruiting | Stage III unresectable NSCLC | N/A | Durvalumab | ||||||
| ORIC-533 | ORIC Pharmaceuticals | Antagonist | Orally | NCT05227144 | I | Recruiting | Relapsed or refractory MM | YES | N/A | ||
Quemliclustat (AB680) | Arcus Biosciences | Antagonist | I.V | NCT04104672 | I | Recruiting | Gastrointestinal malignancies | N/A | CT or CT and zimberelimab | ||
| NCT04381832 | I/II | Recruiting | mCRPC | N/A | Etrumadenant and/or zimberelimab | ||||||
| NCT04660812 | I/II | Recruiting | mCRPC | N/A | AB928 and zimberelimab | ||||||
| Sym024 | Symphogen | Antibody | I.V | NCT04672434 | I | Recruiting | Advanced solid tumors | YES | Sym021 | ||
Uliledlimab (TJ004309) | TRACON Pharmaceuticals | Antibody | I.V | NCT03835949 | I | Active, not recruiting | Advanced or metastatic cancer | N/A | Atezolizumab | ||
| NCT04869501 | N/A | No longer available | Advanced or metastatic cancer | N/A | Atezolizumab | ||||||
| NCT04322006 | I/II | Recruiting | Advanced solid tumors | YES | Anti-PD1 antibody | ||||||
| NCT05001347 | II | Recruiting | OC and selected solid tumors | YES | N/A |
Term list: AK104 an anti-PD1/CTLA4 bispecific antibody, Atezolizumab an anti-PD-L1 antibody, Bevacizumab an anti-VEGF antibody, Budigalimab an anti-PD1 antibody, CT Chemotherapy, Daratumumab an anti-CD38 antibody, DFF332 a small molecule inhibitor for HIF2α, Domvanalimab an anti-TIGIT antibody, Durvalumab an anti-PD-L1 antibody, EOS-448 an anti-TIGIT antibody, HNSC Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, ICI Immune checkpoint inhibitor, INCMGA00012 retifanlimab an anti-PD1 antibody, IPI-549 a PI3K-γ inhibitor, I.V. intravenously, LAG525 ieramilimab an anti-LAG3 antibody, mCRC metastatic colorectal cancer, mCRPC metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer, MEDI0562 an anti-OX40 antibody, mGEC metastatic gastroesophageal cancer, MM multiple myeloma, mNSCLC metastatic non-small-cell lung carcinoma, mPDAC metastatic pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma, MSS-CRC metastatic microsatellite-stable colorectal cancer, mTNBC metastatic TNBC, NHL Non-Hodgkin lymphoma, Nivolumab an anti-PD1 antibody, NP nanoparticle albumin-bound paclitaxel, NSCLC non-small-cell lung carcinoma, OC ovarian cancer, PC prostate cancer, PLD pegylated liposomal doxorubicin, RCC renal cell cancer, rHuPH20 recombinant human hyaluronidase PH20 enzyme, RT radiotherapy, SBRT stereotactic body radiotherapy, Sintilimab an anti-PD1 antibody, Spartalizumab Pembrolizumab an anti-PD1 antibody, PDR001 an anti-PD1 antibody, Sym021 an anti-PD1 antibody, TNBC triple-negative breast cancer, UC urothelial carcinoma, Zimberelimab an anti-PD1 antibody.
aThe data did not support study endpoints
bThe decision to discontinue the study was made based on the totality of the clinical, pharmacokinetic, and pharmacodynamic findings. No safety concerns were observed
cStudy withdrawn prior to enrollment due to changing standard of care landscape
dOverall clinical activity (ORR) for oleclumab + durvalumab is minimal across tumor types and does not support further evaluation of this doublet
eOverall clinical activity (ORR) for oleclumab + durvalumab is minimal across tumor types and does not support further evaluation of this doublet
Fig. 3The strategy to combine inhibition of purinergic pathway and other antitumor therapies. Several components within purinergic signaling pathway including A2AR, A2BR, CD39 and CD73 can be targeted together to achieve synergy in antitumor efficacy by modulating both tumor cells and immune cells, for example, DC and Teff, by pharmacological antagonist and/or antibodies. In addition, targeting purinergic pathway in combination with other therapies such as ICIs, CT, TT, and RT can also develop potential robust strategies to enhance therapeutic benefit in various cancers, which is currently examined and will be further demonstrated in many important clinical trials. A2AR, A2A adenosine receptor; A2BR, A2B adenosine receptor; ADO, adenosine; ADP, adenosine diphosphate; AMP, adenosine monophosphate; ATP, adenosine triphosphate; CT, chemotherapy; CTLA4, cytotoxic T-lymphocyte associated protein 4; DC, dendritic cell; ICI, immune checkpoint inhibitor; MHC I, major histocompatibility complex class I; PD1, programmed cell death protein 1; PD-L1, programmed cell death protein ligand 1; RT, radiotherapy; TCR, T-cell receptor; Teff, effector T cell; TT, targeted therapy. Partly created by Figdraw (www.figdraw.com)